Law of the Environment and Armed Conflict

Author:   Karen Hulme
Publisher:   Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
Volume:   8
ISBN:  

9781786431103


Pages:   904
Publication Date:   29 December 2017
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Law of the Environment and Armed Conflict


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Author:   Karen Hulme
Publisher:   Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
Imprint:   Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
Volume:   8
ISBN:  

9781786431103


ISBN 10:   1786431106
Pages:   904
Publication Date:   29 December 2017
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Contents: Acknowledgements Introduction Karen Hulme PART I THE RATIONALES FOR PROTECTION OF THE ENVIRONMENT IN ARMED CONFLICT 1. Arthur H. Westing (1978), 'Environmental Consequences of the Second Indochina War: A Case Study', Ambio: War and Environment: A Special Issue, 4 (5/6), 216-22 2. Malvern Lumsden (1975), ' Conventional War and Human Ecology', Ambio: War and Environment: A Special Issue, 4 (5/6), 223-8 3. Geoffrey Best (1987), 'The Historical Evolution of Cultural Norms Relating to War and the Environment,' in Arthur H. Westing (ed.) Cultural Norms, War and the Environment, Chapter 2, Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 18-28 4. Merrit P. Drucker (1989), 'The Military Commander's Responsibility for the Environment', Environmental Ethics, 11 (2), Summer, 135-52 5. Major Bernard K. Schafer (1989), 'The Relationship Between the International Laws of Armed Conflict and Environmental Protection: The Need to Reevaluate what Types of Conduct are Permissible During Hostilities', California Western International Law Journal, 19 (2), 287-325 [39] PART II EARLY DIRECTIONS 6. Emanuel Margolis (1955), 'The Hydrogen Bomb Experiments and International Law', Yale Law Journal, 64 (5), April, 629-47 7. Richard A. Falk (1973), 'Environmental Warfare and Ecocide - Facts, Appraisal and Proposals', Security Dialogue, 4 (1), March, 80-96 8. Jozef Goldblat (1977), 'The Environmental Warfare Convention: How Meaningful is it?', Ambio, 6 (4), 216-21 9. Hans Blix (1984), 'Arms Control Treaties Aimed at Reducing the Military Impact on the Environment', in Jerzy Makarczyk (ed.), Essays in International Law in Honour of Judge Manfred Lachs, The Hague, the Netherlands: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 703-16 PART III THE ADVENT OF ADDITIONAL PROTOCOL I 10. George H. Aldrich (1986), 'Progressive Development of the Laws of War: A Reply to Criticisms of the 1977 Geneva Protocol I', Virginia Journal of International Law, 26 (3), 693-720 11. Waldemar A. Solf (2013), 'Article 35-Basic Rules', in Michael Bothe, Karl Josef Partsch and Waldemar A. Solf (eds) with the collaboration of Martin Eaton, New Rules for Victims of Armed Conflicts: Commentary on the Two 1977 Protocols Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 1949, 2nd edition, Reprint revised by Michael Bothe, The Hague, the Netherlands: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 222-8 12. Waldemar A. Solf (2013), 'Article 55-Protection of the Natural Environment', in Michael Bothe, Karl Josef Partsch and Waldemar A. Solf (eds) with the collaboration of Martin Eaton, New Rules for Victims of Armed Conflicts: Commentary on the Two 1977 Protocols Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 1949, 2nd edition, Reprint revised by Michael Bothe, The Hague, the Netherlands: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 385-90 PART IV THE LAW'S FIRST TEST: ANALYZING THE GULF CONFLICT 13. Betsy Baker (1993), 'Legal Protections for the Environment in Times of Armed Conflict', Virginia Journal of International Law, 33, April, 351-83 14. Adam Roberts (1992), 'Environmental Destruction in the 1991 Gulf War', International Review of the Red Cross, 32 (291), December, 538-53 15. Michael Bothe (1991), 'The Protection of the Environment in Times of Armed Conflict: Legal Rules, Uncertainty, Deficiencies and Public Developments', German Yearbook of International Law, 34, 54-62 16. Paul Fauteux (1992), 'The Gulf War, the ENMOD Convention and the Review Conference', United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research Newsletter, 18, July, 6-12 17. Christopher York (1991), 'International Law and the Collateral Effects of War on the Environment: The Persian Gulf', South African Journal on Human Rights, 7, 269-90 18. Hans-Peter Gasser (1995), 'For Better Protection of the Natural Environment in Armed Conflict: A Proposal for Action', American Journal of International Law, 89 (3), July, 637-44 19. Wolff Heintschel von Heihegg and Michael Donner (1994), 'New Developments in the Protection of the Natural Environment in Navel Armed Conflicts', German Yearbook of International Law, 37, 281-314 20. Peter H. Sand (2005), 'Compensation for Environmental Damage from the 1991 Gulf War', Environmental Policy and Law, 35 (6), 244-9 PART V THE CUSTOMARY INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW STUDY 21. Jean-Marie Henckaerts and Louise Doswald-Beck (2005) 'The Natural Environment', in Customary International Humanitarian Law, Volume 1, Rules, Chapter 14, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 143-58 22. Karen Hulme (2007), 'Natural Environment', in Elizabeth Wilmshurst and Susan Breau (eds), Perspectives on the ICRC Study on the Customary International Humanitarian Law, Chapter 8, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 204-37 PART VI GAPS AND POSSIBILITIES IN THE CURRENT LAW 23. Wil D. Verwey (1995), 'Protection of the Environment in Times of Armed Conflict: In Search of a New Legal Perspective', Leiden Journal of International Law, 8 (1), 7-40 24. Peter J. Richards and Michael N. Schmitt (1999), 'Mars Meets Mother Nature: Protecting the Environment During Armed Conflict', Stetson Law Review, XXVIII, 1047-92 25. Karen Hulme (2010), 'Taking Care to Protect the Environment Against Damage: A Meaningless Obligation?', International Review of the Red Cross, 92 (879), September, 675-91 26. Michael Bothe, Carl Brunch, Jordan Diamond and David Jensen (2010), 'International Law Protecting the Environment During Armed Conflict, Gaps and Opportunities', International Review of the Red Cross, 92 (879), September, 569-92 27. Dieter Fleck (2013), 'The Protection of the Environment in Armed Conflict: Legal Obligations in the Absence of Specific Rules', Nordic Journal of International Law, Special Issue: War and the Environment, 82 (1), 7-20 PART VII WEAPONS AND THE ENVIRONMENT 28. Janet E. Lord (1995), 'Legal Restraints in the Use of Landmines: Humanitarian and Environmental Crisis', California Western International Law Journal, 25 (2), 311-55 29. Avril McDonald (2008), 'Depleted Uranium Weapons: The Next Target for Disarmament', Disarmament Forum, (3), 17-24 30. Hitoshi Nasu (2012), 'Nanotechnology and Challenges to International Humanitarian Law: A Preliminary Legal Assessment', International Review of the Red Cross, 94 (886), Summer, 653-72 PART VIII RESPONSIBILITY FOR WARTIME ENVIRONMENTAL DAMAGE 31. Christopher Greenwood (1996), 'State Responsibility and Civil Liability for Environmental Damage Caused by Military Operations', in Richard J. Grunawalt, John E. King and Ronald S. McClain (eds), Protection of the Environment During Armed Conflict, International Law Studies, 69, Chapter XXIII, Newport, RI: Navel War College, 397-415 32. Tara Weinstein (2005), 'Prosecuting Attacks that Destroy the Environment: Environmental Crimes or Humanitarian Atrocities', Georgetown International Environmental Law Review, 17 (4), Summer, 697-722 33. Carl E. Bruch (2001), 'All's Not Fair in (Civil) Law: Criminal Liability for Environmental Damage in Internal Armed Conflict', Vermont Law Review, 25, 695-752 PART IX THE BROADER DEBATES AND RECENT DIRECTIONS IN THE RESEARCH 34. Brendan Kearns (2012), 'When Bonobos Meet Guerillas: Preserving Biodiversity on the Battlefield', Georgetown International Environmental Law Review, 24 (2), Winter, 123-68 35. Britta Sjoestedt (2013), 'The Role of Multilateral Environmental Agreements in Armed Conflict: Green-Keeping in Virunga Park. Applying the UNESCO World Heritage Convention in the Armed Conflict of the Democratic Republic of the Congo', Nordic Journal of International Law, 82 (1), 129-53 36. Mara Tignino (2010), 'Water, International Peace, and Security', International Review of the Red Cross, 92 (879), September, 647-74 37. Silja Voeneky (2000), 'A New Shield for the Environment: Peacetime Treaties as Legal Restraints of Wartime Damage', Review of European Community and International Environmental Law, 9 (1), April, 20-32 38. Daniela Dam-de-Jong (2013), 'From Engines for Conflict into Engines for Sustainable Development: The Potential of International Law to Address Predatory Exploitation of Natural Resources in Situations of Internal Armed Conflict', Nordic Journal of International Law, 82 (1), 155-77 39. Carl Bruch, David Jensen, Mikiyasu Nakayama, Jon Unruh, Rebecca Gruby and Ross Wolfarth (2009), 'Post-Conflict Peace Building and Natural Resources', Yearbook of International Environmental Law, 19 (1), 58-96 Index

Reviews

'This book is the perfect introduction and research tool for all of us that wish to understand the most pertinent issues relating to law of the environment and armed conflict. The compilation is skilfully composed by one of the absolute authorities in the field, Professor Karen Hulme. Through the selection of articles she takes the reader on a historic journey, unveiling the contemporary legal and political context, including the connection between international disarmament law and the law of armed conflict. The contributions discussing the example of the Iraq-Kuwait War - brings the reader into the modern discourse and it is skilfully complemented by contributions on the role of customary international law, gaps and possibilities in current law as well as responsibility for wartime environmental damage. In the last section of the book, Professor Hulme ties it all together by, once again, including contributions that are placed in a modern legal and political context - as well as a look into the future. This is indeed a book to welcome.' -- Ambassador Marie Jacobsson, Former Member of the United Nations International Law Commission and Former Special Rapporteur for the topic Protection of the Environment in Relation to Armed Conflict


A research tour de force from one of the leading historians of Stalinism, shedding remarkable new light on what happened at the end of the Great Purges. A 'must read' for scholars and students of the Soviet period. --Sheila Fitzpatrick, author of Everyday Stalinism This book is exceptional among the voluminous scholarship on Stalin's terror. Lynne Viola has written a fascinating and valuable work. The voices of those hangmen who ultimately became victims of the terror, as well as those they arrested, provide a stark picture of the Great Terror. The author explores the banality of evil in the Stalinist context: from the daily routine of torture and murder emerges the familiar figure of the self-righteous criminal. --Oleg V. Khlevniuk, author of Stalin: New Biography of a Dictator Stalinist Perpetrators draws back the curtain on how the Stalinist Terror actually operated--not just how the state ordered it, but how it happened in provincial offices and prison cells. Her subject is the 'purge of the purgers, ' the trial and often execution of the men responsible for the Terror. The nature of her source material--voluminous case files on these accused individuals--allows her to reconstruct the process and practices of the Stalinist Terror, including the beatings and torture, at the level of individuals, both in Kyiv and in more mundane provincial cities. --Peter Holquist, author of Making War, Forging Revolution: Russia's Continuum of Crisis, 1914-1921 The Stalinist purges of the late 1930s stand as one of the most horrific episodes of state terror in the twentieth century. Yet the perpetrators of those crimes have remained anonymous for many decades, protected mainly by the rules of historical access in Russia. Now, Lynne Viola, working in Ukrainian archives, provides the first remarkable study of the perpetrators. In this groundbreaking book, we see for the first time who these individuals were, their backgrounds, what brought them to their position of life and death decisions, what life was like for them and their families during such a time. Most important, Viola examines with keen and dispassionate acumen how Stalin's murderers justified the torture and killing of hundreds of thousands of their fellow citizens. This is a disturbing book, and one that needs to be read. --David Shearer, author of Stalin and the Lubianka: A Documentary History of the Political Police and Security Organs in the Soviet Union, 1922-1953


`This book is the perfect introduction and research tool for all of us that wish to understand the most pertinent issues relating to law of the environment and armed conflict. The compilation is skilfully composed by one of the absolute authorities in the field, Professor Karen Hulme. Through the selection of articles she takes the reader on a historic journey, unveiling the contemporary legal and political context, including the connection between international disarmament law and the law of armed conflict. The contributions discussing the example of the Iraq-Kuwait War - brings the reader into the modern discourse and it is skilfully complemented by contributions on the role of customary international law, gaps and possibilities in current law as well as responsibility for wartime environmental damage. In the last section of the book, Professor Hulme ties it all together by, once again, including contributions that are placed in a modern legal and political context - as well as a look into the future. -- This is indeed a book to welcome.' - Ambassador Marie Jacobsson, Former Member of the United Nations International Law Commission and Former Special Rapporteur for the topic Protection of the Environment in Relation to Armed Conflict


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Edited by Karen Hulme, Professor of Law, University of Essex, UK

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